Find and replace in prefix/suffix without removing field codes
Hello, I am in the last few days of my PhD thesis and my supervisor has asked me to switch to single quotation marks.
For example:
Williams said: "I love to quote Jim who said 'hi'. Jim is great."
Change to:
Williams said: 'I love to quote Jim who said "hi". Jim is great.'
Don't ask me why, it is just a preference thing among some British academics.
Through a series of find/replace commands in MS Word I was able to fix the body of my thesis. But, I stayed away from the footnotes because I didn't want them to break.
Can anyone help me? I have over 700 footnotes to fix and now that my entire thesis is combined Zotero is running very very slow when I open and close a citation.
Thanks!
For example:
Williams said: "I love to quote Jim who said 'hi'. Jim is great."
Change to:
Williams said: 'I love to quote Jim who said "hi". Jim is great.'
Don't ask me why, it is just a preference thing among some British academics.
Through a series of find/replace commands in MS Word I was able to fix the body of my thesis. But, I stayed away from the footnotes because I didn't want them to break.
Can anyone help me? I have over 700 footnotes to fix and now that my entire thesis is combined Zotero is running very very slow when I open and close a citation.
Thanks!
Any other tips would be appreciated. Thanks!
A completely other way of doing it would be to edit the citation style that you are using to switch quotation marks. Normally, the citation styles appear to enforce one particular style of quotation marks, so if you change the style file (.csl), it will change all footnotes automatically. Which style are you using?
I wonder if editing the .csl style file to accomplish this is a complicated process? I opened the file in notepad and I'm a bit unsure where to find a setting for the quotation marks.
(Otherwise I'll also do the physical find and replace procedure when I prepare the final draft for submission.)
I see in the "addendum to the SBL style guide" of my institution that they still seem to want the title of an article in double quotes, while using single quotes for any direct quotation.
I'm wondering if this is just something unique to the institution or if others have similar experiences. In that case neither the GB or the US locale setting is really going to help.